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by fdupress
864 days ago
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This is a lot less true in mathematics research, where a question existing and not being trivial is enough motivation to investigate. I would in fact argue that the trend, in "applied" fields, of justifying the importance of a piece of work by pointing out that a lot of people are doing similar work is in fact self-fulfilling. That makes it somewhat useless as a measure of importance. Scientific context should be critical, not just descriptive. |
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When you write your paper you say exactly this in the introductory context. Here is what other people have done, here is a problem not yet solved in this area, we solve it. It saves the reader an enormous amount of time by not having to do a literature review themselves to see how the paper fits into the larger thrust of the field, and what the novelty is.
How can you justify the novelty other than by comparing to other people's work?